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16 October 2018 - 11:57
News ID: 441057
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Rasa - The Geneva-based Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor (Euro-Med) Monday said that Israeli forces caused injuries to one in every 100 Palestinians as Gaza protests conclude 200 days and called on the international community to exert serious pressure on Israel to end its targeting of Palestinian demonstrators.
A wounded Palestinian is evacuated during a protest calling for lifting the Israeli blockade on Gaza and demanding the right to return to their homeland, at the border fence between the besieged Gaza Strip and Israeli-occupied territories on October 5, 2018. (Photo by Reuters)

RNA - “The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor calls on the international community to exert serious pressure to put an end to the targeting of Palestinian demonstrators in the Gaza Strip and to protect their right to peaceful assembly,” said Euro-Med in a statement, WAFA reported.

 

It also called on “all parties concerned to exert pressure on Israel to lift its blockade affecting every aspect of Gaza’s largely civilian population.”

 

The non-profit, youth-led organizations also called on the Commission of Inquiry, which was formed at the request of the Human Rights Council to investigate Israeli violations against the demonstrators, to deliver its report to the concerned parties as soon as possible -- “especially with civilians’ lives still at stake -- so that the (United Nations) Security Council and the (International Criminal Court) ICC may hold accountable those responsible for the killing of civilians in the coastal enclave.”

 

Euro-Med described as “deeply shocking” Israeli forces’ continued use of excessive force against Palestinian protesters at the Israel-Gaza fence, noting that in the 200 days of protests, Gaza has lost 205 members of its population.

 

At least one Palestinian is killed every single day, said Euro-Med Monitor, further noting that in every 100 Gazans, one injury was recorded.

 

 “Despite the fact that the protesters were mostly unarmed civilians and did not in most cases pose a credible threat, the Israeli forces met them with lethal force, including by live fire and explosive bullets, as well as toxic gas and tear gas,” it said, adding that 69 of those injured, 14 of whom were children, suffered permanent disability, according to the latest statistics by the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

 

 “Israel’s response to protests violates the principles of international human rights law; that is, despite the fact that protests have largely been peaceful, Israeli soldiers killed 205 people, including five women and 38 children, while also injuring 22,527 others, 18% of whom are children,” it said.

 

With Gaza’s health facilities short on operable equipment and medical supplies, the death toll is expected to rise and those injured are left with long-term effects.

 

Meanwhile, said Euro-Med, “the Israeli authorities continue to impose a relentlessly suffocating blockade that has left civilians unaccounted for, simply as collateral damage to a policy of collective punishment.”

 

The Israeli forces targeted Palestinians indiscriminately, said Euro-Med Monitor. Neither medical teams nor journalists were spared; three medical personnel have been killed and 409 others wounded by live ammunition and tear gas canisters since the beginning of demonstrations. In addition, 84 ambulances and medical tents have been targeted using gas bombs.

 

Half of the wounded were shot using live ammunition, and 449 were injured by explosive bullets, said Sarah Pritchett, Euro-Med’s spokeswoman.

 

The Israeli soldiers deliberately caused the greatest harm they could to civilians, added Pritchett, stating that, in light of the international community's failure to take concrete steps to end the Gaza crisis, Israeli soldiers continue to target Gazans with impunity.

 

The targeting of civilians while exercising their right to peaceful assembly, guaranteed by Article 21 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, cannot be justified, and violates the protection accorded to them as civilians - in accordance with Article III of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits attacks on persons not taking part in hostilities, Pritchett further stated.

 

The targeting of medical staff and journalists also contravenes international humanitarian law, specifically articles 15 and 79 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions, which stipulate that medical, journalistic and civilian personnel must be respected and protected.

 

It is noteworthy that the popular marches that have been taking place at the Israel-Gaza fence for 29 weeks act as a response, according to the organizers, to the continued policy of collective punishment against citizens in the Gaza Strip, in addition to demanding the right of return for Palestinian refugees, in accordance with United Nations resolution 194.

 

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